LIFE AFTER THE MOVIES:
FORMER FILM STARS TRANSITION INTO 1950S TELEVISION
The 1950s represented a transitory period for most
Americans. Among other changes, a world war had recently ended, suburban life
was evolving, and the Hollywood studio system was collapsing. A 1958 article in
U.S. News and World Report, “What TV Is Doing to the Movie Industry,” eulogized
the industry as a “dying giant.” Film historian Thomas Cripps notes, “Americans
had been changed by the war. It had inured them to hardship and hardened them
against the attractions of movie sentimentality.” Former contract players had
to find new work. Fortunately for them, a new medium was slowly rising to
power.
In a few short years, television took the place of film as
the most popular form of entertainment. The creators and developers of
television had been waiting for a chance to break into the market. After years
of setbacks that included disagreements among inventors and the onset of World
War II, television was able to expand into a thriving industry in a matter of a
few years. A visually captivating form of entertainment crossed over into the
private confines of the home for the first time. Television did have to
overcome the initial naysayer. Some worried this new medium could have
detrimental effects upon those who viewed it. A 1950 Timearticle, “Kiddies in
the Old Corral,” argued that television “threatened to change Americans into
creatures with eyeballs as big as cantaloupes and no brain at all.” Not only
did television conquer this negative stereotype, but it also grew exponentially
in the decade of the 1950s with help from former Hollywood film stars.
A considerable number of actors and actresses who lost their
jobs during the downsizing of the film industry jumped from the big screen to
the small screen. Loretta Young, Eve Arden, Frank Sinatra, Ray Milland, Ann
Sothern, and others found success on this fledgling medium. Not all stars were
willing to leave an industry they had helped to create and turn into the
dominant film industry throughout the entire world. Indeed, some film stars
thought appearing on television was a death sentence. In “Recruits from
Hollywood,” an article in a 1953 issue of Time, Van Heflin stated crossing over
to television could “very easily mean the complete destruction of his career in
motion pictures.”
More and more, however, television was gaining momentum. In
the United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., or just simply, the Paramount
Case, for example, the Supreme Court rocked the film industry by divorcing
production and exhibition. The major movie studios of the time, MGM, Paramount,
RKO, Warner Brothers, and Fox, were vertically integrated. This meant that not
only did they produce and distribute their films, but they also owned the
theaters where their films were exhibited. The Supreme Court found the film
studios to be in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (334 U.S. 131). The
vertically integrated studios had to divest themselves of their theaters. No
guaranteed theater distribution meant no guaranteed profits.
Before this decision was rendered, the film industry was one
of the most profitable industries in America. After the Paramount Case ruling,
a television agency conducted a survey about television’s effect on
movie-going. As reported in a 1948 article inBroadcasting and Telecasting,
“Effect on Movie-Going Habits,” “three-fourths of the set owners interviewed
are spending more evenings at home now. Slightly more than half are going to
the movies less often, although formerly they were confirmed and in most cases
very heavy movie-goers.” Those who could access television were choosing the
stay-at-home form of entertainment over going to the movies, which required the
effort of leaving the home. The movie industry was losing money fast and needed
a way to generate some sort of profit. Studios decided to begin selling off parts
of their film libraries to generate money. Television reaped the benefits.
As John Belton explains in American Cinema/American Culture,
studios began making “fewer but more expensive films, hoping to lure audiences
back to the theater with quality product.” This plan did not work as well as
projected, so several studios subsidized their earnings through selling off
their film libraries. Now people didn’t have to go to the theater to see
movies; they could watch them in the comfort of their home. One film studio
alone could supply television with a staggering amount of material from their
older movies. According to a 1956 article in Newsweek, RKO sold “740
full-length pictures, more than 1,000 short subjects,” and a 1956 Business Week
article stated that 20th Century Fox also sold part of their film library to
television, around 390 films. With plenty of quality entertainment, television
became the diamond of the entertainment industry, while the past jewels of the
industry, film and radio, slowly dropped in the tastes of Americans.
Following the Paramount Case, many former movie stars wanted
to perform on television. Some of these former stars now had the films that
made them famous in the 1930s and 1940s on TV. They could take that newly
acquired popularity and parlay it into a television career. U.S. News and World
Report gathered information that concluded in 1948 about 90 million people were
attending the movies every week. Once television took off and movies began
being shown on TV, about 46 million people were going to the movies every week,
as of 1958. They also stated that about 204 million people watch movies on
television. The popularity of former Hollywood stars was rising again with the
advent of television, and more importantly, movies on TV.
The Paramount Case was not the only reason television was on
the rise. Several Federal Communications Commission (FCC) decisions also pushed
the popularity of television along. The year of 1948 was shaping up to be a
particularly important year for television. Just one year earlier, as reported
in an article entitled “Number of U.S. Stations Up 60% in Year,” “fiscal 1947
brought an approximately 60% gain in the number of U.S. commercial AM, FM, and
television stations.” Television stations and affiliates began sprouting up
throughout the country. Unfortunately, there was so much interest in television
that it became a problem. Interference occurred throughout the stations in the
U.S. In 1948, the “coming out year” for television, according to Broadcasting
and Telecasting, the FCC decided to stop all assignments of television licenses
in order to fix the problem of interference and other issues in television.
What came to be known as “the freeze” had begun.
The television community and the American public were upset
over this stoppage in the development of broadcast television. According to a
1950 article “Barometer Reading on the Freeze,” when the freeze was “invoked,
on Sept. 30, 1948, they expected it to last six to nine months. A year later
the first round of hearings were just getting under way, and the end was not
yet in sight.” Trade journals tracked the status of the freeze almost weekly.
Despite the FCC acknowledging television as “one of the country’s most
important industries and an important medium not merely for public
entertainment but also for the development of an informed public,” they still
would not lift the freeze. In 1951, there was a minor victory for television
when the FCC gave more frequency space for television, but that still did not
quench the television craze that was creeping across the nation. Finally, in
April of 1952, the freeze was lifted.
Television now had the opportunity to grow into a
juggernaut. The FCC made seventy UHF channels available and set distances
between stations so co-channel and adjacent channel interference would be cut
down and eliminated, among other things. While some remained unimpressed by “a
plan which, at best, still must be viewed as abortive,” others were ecstatic as
noted in a 1952 article “Four Wasted Years?” Applications for television
licenses began trickling in, some still unsure about the viability of
television. Another 1952 article, “Is TV Headed for a Double Standard,”
forecasted it may take “between six and eight years before some TV applicants
know whether they are in or out as station owners.” Despite these misgivings,
the floodgates opened and applications for TV licenses began coming forth.
Businessmen wanted to get into the television industry once they realized it
was here to stay. The FCC began considering television license applications on
July 1, 1952, and by August 14, 1952, 755 total television license applications
had been received as reported byBroadcasting and Telecasting that year.
Once television stations began opening up across the
country, there was a direct correlation to the number of former Hollywood stars
who began appearing on television. As the medium grew, so did the interest of
former film stars in coming to television. From 1950-1952, Gene Autry, Robert
Montgomery, Frank Sinatra, Red Skelton, and Eve Arden appeared on television
shows during prime time. After 1952, television was continuing to expand so
even more former film stars crossed over to television. Ray Milland, Loretta
Young, Ray Bolger, Mickey Rooney, Alfred Hitchcock, Robert Cummings, Jimmy
Durante, Jane Wyman, Dick Powell, Rosemary Clooney, Ida Lupino, Ann Sothern,
Donna Reed, June Allyson, Betty Hutton, Robert Taylor, and others starred in
television shows between 1953 and 1959. Some stars played characters similar to
ones they had played in the movies, while others played new roles that brought
a new vitality to their careers. Television became the “in” place to work.
Former Hollywood stars realized that. They no longer had careers in Hollywood.
They had aged, and just as Hollywood wants young actors and actresses today,
they wanted young actors and actresses in the 1950s.
Perhaps the most practical reason for former Hollywood
movies stars to come to television was that these former stars needed to work.
A symbiotic relationship formed between actors who needed to work and an
industry that needed legitimating. Just as early film borrowed from the theater
to be taken seriously, television borrowed from the silver screen to be
legitimized. Jane Wyman had won an Oscar for her portrayal of a deaf mute in
1948’sJohnny Belinda. Wyman became popular hosting and starring in several
episodes of Jane Wyman Presents the Fireside Theater. Ray Milland, like Wyman
won an Oscar, except his award came through his portrayal of an alcoholic
writer in 1945’s Lost Weekend. Milland took his former film success and turned
it into television success with his role in Meet Mr. McNulty. Television even
drew the interests of John Wayne and Humphrey Bogart. Bogart may have even gone
on to star on television if it was not for his untimely death.
Appearing in a television show could not only give former
film stars popularity on television, but also reinvent them on the covers of
magazines. In 1954, Earl B. Abrams noted in Broadcasting and Telecasting that
“any frequenter of newsstands must have noticed in recent years a new crop of
periodicals. These are the fan magazines which feed off that newest and rising
art, television.” The 1950s were a hotbed of activity for magazines devoted to
television and television stars. The same aforementioned article contains a
title that would have caused many former Hollywood film stars to consider
television “Fan Magazines: They Used to Feed off Movies; Now They’re Gorging on
TV.”
A once popular film career didn’t put food on the table;
television could put food on the table. Ann Sothern found success in television
after a flagging film career. When asked byTime magazine what Sothern really
wanted from life, she responded: “a man who is 40, rich and Catholic. Then I’ll
quit this business in a second. Until then I’ll have to spend my time
hermetically sealed on Stage 8.” Sothern had no desire to work, but she had to
support herself. Joan Crawford, once a huge box-office draw, also looked at
television as a financial opportunity. Crawford said about television, “I find
it extremely attractive, because it pays for itself and then becomes an annuity
for my children. How else can you save money these days?” Neither actress
mentions how much they enjoy acting, but both mention television as the key to
receiving an income.
1950s television became a life preserver in a bleak ocean of
inopportunity for film stars who had faded from the limelight. The Paramount
Case, FCC decisions, and a sheer need to work are all reasons film stars
started anew on television in the 1950s. Personnel that worked in early
television received their training from the movies, classic films were a
considerable portion of television programming, and most importantly, the stars
who had made the silver screen shine now also made the television set glow
against the faces of delighted audiences.
Source : americanpopularculture.com
No comments:
Post a Comment